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U.K. Community Issues Party
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| The
Rt Hon Clare Short MP |
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A
copy of 'Clare ShortS the letter giving reasons for resigning
the whip,
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There is no point in being in
parliament if you are not allowed to say what you think”
“I'm afraid that the reality
is simply that I have lost confidence in Her Majesty's Government.
This is all very sad. The opportunity of 1997 was as big as
that of 1945. Under Neil Kinnock and John Smith Labour had
prepared itself for power as a modern Social Democratic party.
Tony Blair brought extra gloss but we were already set to
win. New Labour has done a lot of rewriting of history. |
In
my view the ‘97-2000 government did reasonably well. We implemented
many of the policies promised under the Kinnock/Smith policy
reviews, including the minimum wage, devolution for Scotland
and Wales and a stronger commitment to International Development.
The spin started early and caused irritation but overall it
was a reasonable labour government.
The rot set in with the second term. Blair had become more confident
and did not want his legacy to be one of spin and focus groups.
We now know, thanks to the publication of the Downing Street
memo and other leaks, that he promised Bush that he would support
regime change in Iraq in the spring of 2002 and “the intelligence
and the facts were being fixed around the policy.” After I resigned
from the Government in 2003, I assumed there would be great
debate in parliament and party over Iraq in order to hold Blair
to account and start to put things right. But I soon found that
the system is broken, and this was not to be. All Bills were
guillotined . In the big debates, speeches were limited to seven
minutes and no one was listening. Under Thatcher we had been
able to use the weapon of time to squeeze concessions. Guillotines
made this impossible and massively weakened the Commons. Ruthless
use of the power of the whips crushed the spirit of the Parliamentary
Labour Party.
Iraq and all its consequences was the biggest blow, but then
came top up fees and the unwillingness to consider other options
like a graduate tax. I was seeing more and more asylum seekers
at my advice bureau and it became clear that the system was
a mixture of cruelty and incompetence. The endless targets,
initiatives and reorganisation in the health and education systems
were undermining much of the good the extra money was doing.
Labour used to be a party of progressive thinking on criminal
justice, but increasingly the policy was dictated by the tabloids
and the prison population grew ever larger, as did the costs
and the reoffending of those who were imprisoned. Then came
plans for mega casinos to regenerate poor areas. And even more
seriously, control orders and proposals for 90-day detention.
The rhetoric on the war on terror was inane and the policies
exacerbated the problem. Increasingly I voted against the government
and was saddened, as the Labour Conference became a rally for
the leader. The party as well as parliament failed to correct
what was wrong.
My unhappy relationship with the whips started early. Hilary
Armstrong started making threats early on and said I must not
say that we were spying on Kofi Anan or that Tony had deceived
the country into war. Because I would not agree, I increasingly
became a pariah. I considered not fighting the 2005 election,
but friends were sure the party would fight back and convinced
me that I should stay. I fought the election on an explicit
platform that the government had done some good things and made
terrible mistakes and that I would support what was good and
oppose when necessary. But sadly there was no fight back. Gordon
Brown was increasingly diminished and was forced to say that
he supported all that Blair had done. And then Brown supported
the commitments to a renewal of Trident and nuclear power without
any serious debate. It seemed nothing would change.
My trouble with the Whips was renewed when I spoke at a Greenpeace
meeting on Trident at the Hay book festival in 2006. There were
800 people there and the mood was predominantly against renewal.
But someone said it was clear the government had made a decision
so it did not matter what we thought. I then said there was
a high likelihood that the next election would produce a hung
parliament, which could give us a changed electoral system,
then all such questions could be reopened. The Chief Whip then
wrote to say I was not allowed to say this because it would
mean Labour MPs losing seats. She was unmoved by the argument
that electoral reform had been a manifesto policy in 97 and
that it was the government record not my advocacy of electoral
reform that was endangering Labour seats.
There was then a stream of stories in the press to say I was
to be expelled from the party, have the whip withdrawn or be
punished in some other ways. So then I decided I would not stand
in the next election and thought that with just a couple of
years to run the Whips would leave me alone. But while I was
Addis Ababa two weeks ago to help an NGO in trouble, I got media
calls about a public rebuke from the Chief Whip. And on my return
there were threatening letters saying that informing the Whips
of my visit did not mean I had permission to go. So it seemed
that they planned to prevent me speaking at the lectures and
meetings I have committed to and that a stream of rebukes was
inevitable. And so finally the elastic snapped. This is not
a Labour government. And I have no confidence in it. The right
thing to do is resign the whip and sit as an independent Labour
MP. After 23 years in the Commons and 36 in the party I have
decided to use my last couple of years to speak freely and accept
invitations to speak outside parliament without the Whips' permission.
Many of my constituents have spent the weekend telling me I
should not go, but when I say I will be there until the next
election they are more content. Our political system is in trouble.
The Middle East is burning. And as Lester Brown says, we need
major change in the way we live to rescue “a planet under stress
and a civilisation in trouble.” I feel very sad that my relationship
with my party has ended up like this. But electoral reform is
the key to fixing our politics and changing our country. And
there is no point in being in parliament if you are not allowed
to say what you think ”. |
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